1 Samuel 3: Familiar with the Lord
Thursday, February 26, 2026
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Samuel is dedicated to the Lord by his mother Hannah – and we can read this story in the opening chapters. So that we are not tempted to believe that Samuel has some sort of advantage over us by his living in the Temple, we will want to look closely at verse 7: At that time Samuel was not familiar with the Lord.
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When we turn to others to share the good news we have heard about God’s revealed word to us, we too prophesy as Samuel did. Samuel grew up and the Lord was with him, not permitting any word of his to be without effect. We may frown at this simple statement and wonder why some of our words fall on deaf ears and some of our actions are scoffed. Rather than preoccupy ourselves with these anxieties, we might better want to place all of these worries at God’s feet and remember that only God can cure impossible people and mend impossible situations. As we read the Story of Samuel as a grown man in later chapters we will see the struggles he encounters with the stiff necked people who clamor for a king. Samuel will confess to God that he has been a poor messenger and God will reply: It is not you they reject, they are rejecting me as their king. As they have treated me constantly from the day I brought them up from Egypt to this day, deserting me and worshiping strange gods, so do they treat you too.(1 Samuel 8:7-8) We ought not be surprised when others reject the words we speak in God’s name, we are told. These people reject God as Lord. Like Samuel, all we need do is remain faithful to God and continue to walk in God’s way, knowing that we are learning to become familiar with the Lord.

When we stand firm in God at the expense of our comfort, when we witness faithfully and run the risk of losing some of what we are in the world, we too will be familiar with Lord just as Samuel grew to be. The Lord continued to appear at Shiloh: he manifested himself to Samuel at Shiloh through his word, and Samuel spoke to all Israel. We may wish to hear God’s voice more distinctly. We may want God to touch us more obviously. We may long for stark clarity from our God. Yet let us consider these facts. We are created in God’s image. We are dearly loved. We are accompanied by angels, saints and even God as Lord. We are sustained, harbored, cajoled, wooed, healed, restored and saved by God. We are even given the freedom to return this love or to reject it. We are given the opportunity to deeply, intensely and even passionately become so familiar with our God that we are able to wake in the night and respond to that quiet call of our name: Here I am!
When we begin to doubt, when we begin to frown at what we believe we do not have from God, let us consider what it is we do have. And let us grow as Samuel grew, to become ever more familiar with the Lord.
A re-post from December 12, 2011.
Images from: http://my316notes.blogspot.com/2010/12/i-samuel-316.html and http://firstlutheranbp.wordpress.com/2009/01/17/u-pick-the-prayer/ and https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Georges_de_La_Tour_022.jpg and http://my316notes.blogspot.com/2010/12/i-samuel-316.html
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